The Spark: The “We ❤️ Libraries” Edition

It’s a fairly quiet week. This is partly because here in the US we’re in the last throes of summer, when the pace slows down just a bit, and everyone soaks up the last bit of summer fun they can. The other part is that I was on a very long vacation, and leaving the vacation world and coming back to the book world has been, let’s say, not the easiest transition. So this is a light load, but still full of exciting news.

Hot from the Press

Another great review for All Rise! This time, from one of our favorite places— the library! Kate Brittian, the Teen Librarian at the Wilson County Public Library in North Carolina, reviewed All Rise as part of the library’s weekly Teen Book Review.

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The Spark: The List of Lists Edition

Welcome to The Spark, our mini newsletter featuring news from Catalyst and beyond. If you’d like to subscribe to the full size version, click here. Same great news, in a larger size. Anyway, onwards!

In Catalyst news, you can hear two of our talented authors showing off their skills behind the mic in these conversations hosted by PEN South Africa. Richard Conyngham, author of the recently-released graphic novel All Rise, joins Rebecca Hall, author of Wake: The Hidden History of Women-Led Slave Revolts, for a conversation led by professor Hlonipha Mokoena on “historical revolts and acts of resistance, working with archival records, pedagogy, and the relationship between illustration and written narratives.” And Unmaking Grace author, Barbara Boswell leads a conversation between poets Natalie Diaz and vangile gantsho. They discuss “art and healing, sensualities, the violence of the English language as well as how it is transformed by those who speak it.” Both All Rise and Unmaking Grace are out now.

Barbara Boswell and Richard Conyngham
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Author Q&A: Richard Conyngham

We’re so excited for the upcoming release of All Rise: Resistance and Rebellion in South Africa, a graphic history of six untold legal cases that shaped the civil rights history of South Africa. Set during the pre-apartheid years, the acts of resistance and rebellion brought to life in All Rise were spearheaded by ordinary citizens from marginalized communities on a mission to improve the safety and freedoms of themselves and their loved ones. Each story is illustrated by a different South African illustrator, creating a visually arresting anthology representative of the vast beauty and complex multicultural history of the “Rainbow Nation”.

I’ve been an observer of this project from afar for many years, so it’s thrilling to see it all come together in print. And today I have the privilege of chatting with the author and historian behind the anthology, Richard Conyngham. Born and raised in South Africa and now living in Mexico City, Richard has degrees from the University of Cape Town and Cambridge University and many years of education and literary work under his belt, having worked with organizations like Equal Education, The Bookery, the London publisher Slightly Foxed, and the edtech organization MakeTomorrow. Back in 2016, he collaborated on his first graphic history with the Trantaal Brothers, an artist duo out of Cape Town (who also illustrated a chapter of All Rise), to create an illustrated companion to the O’Regan-Pikoli Commission of Inquiry into policing in Khayelitsha. 

Richard spent the last six years researching and creating All Rise, and all that hard work has paid off to create a truly amazing end result. The collection is getting all sorts of hype from big names in the literary, comics and history worlds alike–including a Starred (!!) review from Kirkus–and we can’t wait to share the book with you when it hits the shelves on May 17th.

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#ReadingAfrica Week Comics Panel

We love comics and graphic novel here at Catalyst! One of our earliest releases was Shaka Rising, a graphic novel exploring the life of a legendary Zulu king. We followed that up with a sequel—King Shaka—and a historical graphic novel in translation, Madame Livingstone. 2022 brings another, this time a graphic history, All RIse. That’s why we couldn’t be more excited for this #ReadingAfrica Week Comics/Graphic Novels panel.

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